Qihua Yushu
Qihua Yushu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Q í Hu ā y ù sh ù, meaning that the ancients referred to the flowers and trees in the fairyland, and also to the scenery in the frost and snow. From the song of sleepwalking on the sea.
The origin of Idioms
"The scenery is as long as February and March," says Yang Weizhen in his song of sleepwalking on the sea
Idiom usage
As subject, object, attribute; used of fairyland or snowscape. example the wild grass is all the rage, the mountain is high and windy, the frost on the grass is high, and the four mountains reflect back, the flowers and trees are beautiful and exquisite. Xu HongZu's travels to Tiantai Mountain
Chinese PinYin : qí huā yù shù
Qihua Yushu
a dog trying to catch mice -- too meddlesome. gǒu ná hào zǐ
fabricate rumours to mislead people. liú yán huò zhòng
unable to profit from what one has read. tú dú fù shū